In dispatches written from around the world, Anne-christine d’Adesky reports on the greatest challenge facing us today: the global effort to provide life-saving medicines and care to 40 million people living with HIV and AIDS in resource-poor countries, the great majority in sub-Saharan Africa.

She analyzes the obstacles to providing universal access to antiretroviral drugs whose cost has been out of reach to millions until now, and she exposes the underlying and often competing agendas of donor and recipient governments, funders, activists and individuals with HIV who are struggling to survive. In lively, in-depth field reports from countries including Cuba, Brazil, Russia, Haiti, Mexico, Uganda, South Africa, China and India, she reveals how pilot and national treatment programs are serving as models. They provide a litmus test of the feasibility of HIV and AIDS treatment in settings of abject poverty, underdevelopment and economic and political instability.

Looking ahead, Moving Mountains discusses the potential of AIDS treatment programs to bolster prevention efforts and help rebuild shattered nations and economies. It also warns of the consequences that could face individuals, nations and the world if we fail to achieve this monumental task.

Anne-christine d'Adesky is an award-winning journalist, author and filmmaker who has written about AIDS and global politics for the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Nation, Village Voice, and OUT. She received amfAR's Award of Courage for pioneering AIDS journalism and has just completed a global AIDS documentary, Pills, Profits and Protest.

Unrated Critic Reviews for Moving Mountains

Publishers Weekly

Traveling the world to witness the myriad faces of this gruesome epidemic, journalist and AIDS activist d'Adesky has created a hard-hitting, almost textbook-like recitation of the current state of affairs in the battle to vanquish AIDS.

Project MUSE

D'Adesky also describes Uganda's success in reducing HIV prevalence, Paul Farmer's efforts to provide treatment to the poorest of the poor in rural Haiti, and Brazil's leadership in providing ARV treatment to its citizens.